Grammy-winning musician Mojo Morgan is charging into the heart of summer with Dreams — a searing new single that doubles as a mission statement. It’s bold, it’s rebellious, and it’s a rallying cry for anyone daring to defy limits.
“This song is for the fighters — the people who won’t be boxed in by circumstance or silenced by doubt,” Mojo said. “Dreams isn’t just music, it’s momentum. It’s proof that where you’re going matters more than where you started.”
The single leads off Mojo’s upcoming project, Jamaica Love, a fearless EP recorded across both rural hideaways and the charged streets of Kingston. Having immersed himself in Jamaica’s cultural undercurrent — often in the company of dancehall heavyweight Popcaan — Mojo soaked up the sights, sounds, and contradictions of everyday life, using them to sculpt a body of work both deeply personal and unmistakably Jamaican.
Co-produced by Rowan ‘Droptop’ Melhado — the studio architect behind breakout tracks from Skeng, Popcaan, and Chronic Law — Dreams merges the triumphant tones of reggae with the edge of rock, draped in the raw emotion of Mojo’s vocal performance.
“This track had to be different,” said Droptop. “I’ve been in the trenches with street anthems, but with Mojo, the goal was elevation — something gritty but spiritual. Dreams hits both.”
Mojo Morgan isn’t chasing trends. He’s defining them. The Jamaica Love EP is not your typical reggae compilation. It’s a global tapestry — hip-hop, country, Americana, and roots reggae colliding under one roof. Features from legends like Sizzla, Gramps Morgan, and Popcaan anchor the record, while rising voices from Mojo’s own family — including his children and nephew — ensure the legacy stretches forward.
The project also stands as a tribute to Mojo’s late brother and Morgan Heritage bandmate, Peetah Morgan. “This EP is sacred ground,” Mojo shared. “It carries my grief, my hope, and my love for Jamaica — and for Peetah, who walks with me through every bar.”
Other high-impact tracks include Mountain Song featuring Gramps Morgan and Esh Morgan, and By My Side, a warm, intergenerational collaboration with Jemere and Kelib Morgan.
Through Jamaica Love, Mojo introduces listeners to “Rasta Rock” — a hybrid genre that marries Bob Marley’s soul, Peter Tosh’s militancy, Coldplay’s atmosphere, and the lyrical bravado of hip-hop’s golden age. It’s both ancestral and avant-garde.
“I’m not here to recreate,” Mojo said. “I’m here to evolve the sound, to remind the world what Jamaican music can be when you let it breathe, burn, and rise.”
In a summer where mediocrity runs rampant, Dreams refuses to play it safe. And neither does Mojo Morgan.